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Chapter8-GlobalTrade.pptx

Chapter 8 Global Trade

Globalization of Free Trade

Silk Road – earliest example

Models of Trade

Mercantilist

Autarky

Comparative Advantage

Competitive Advantage

Strategic Trade Theory

Globalization of Free Trade

Countries move from protectionist to free trade and back

Corn Laws

Great Depression

Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act - 1934

Creation of institutions to help globally

International Monetary Fund

International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank)

Globalization of Free Trade

Creation of Institutions to help globally

General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)

GATT becomes the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1993

Most-Favored Nation Clause

Exchange Rates, Budget Deficits and Trade

Exchange Rate

The value of the dollar

Neomercantilism

Trade deficit vs. trade surplus

Global Companies

Fordism vs. post-Fordism

Communication/technological innovations

Financial globalization

Race to the bottom

Made in China

Promotion of Equality

India and the untouchables aka dalits

Global Companies

Labor Unions

Have declined significantly in the US since the 1980s

Public Perceptions

Political Change

Knowledge-Based Economy

Globalization of Individualism

Employment Competition

Global Financial Crisis

Global Companies

Labor Unions

Anti-globalization

Global Trade Disputes

Tariffs

Tax imposed on exports and imports that increase their cost to the consumer

Quotas

Specify limits on the number of products to create a barrier to importing them

Subsidies

Government payments to an industry to help control the price

Global Trade Disputes

Subsidies in Agriculture cause numerous trade disputes

EU - Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)

US – Agricultural Legislation in 1933

Iron Triangle

Genetically Modified Food

Global Trade and the Environment

Environmental protection is used as a barrier to free trade

Shrimp nets

Diseases and Global Trade

Madcow Disease

Trade Blocs

Several reasons for the formation of regional trade blocs

Economic Development

Managing Trade Regionally

Economic Competition

Political and Strategic Considerations

Range from free-trade to economic unions

Trade Blocs/Economic Unions

The European Union

Most powerful trade bloc recognized today

NAFTA

Canada, Mexico, and the US

ASEAN

South American Common Market